Title: Fall of Cleveland 68 - I've Seen Fire, and I've Seen Fire Author: Spaghetti_Land Pastebin link: http://pastebin.com/DUcsGYfT First Edit: Thursday 23rd of January 2014 01:38:18 PM CDT Last Edit: Thursday 23rd of January 2014 01:38:18 PM CDT http://www.fluffybooru.org/post/view/3439   Written by Mayclore   I've Seen Fire, and I've Seen Fire >You are the commanding general of III Corps. >You're holed up in Akron for now, overseeing operations in Cleveland. >They have been an abject disaster. >Too many fluffy ponies have choked the area. >While units on the west side of the city made good progress in getting near downtown, they got stuck as fluffy ponies piled up in the streets. >With the number of ponies in the Cleveland-Spaghetti Land area outnumbering your troops forty to one, you've had to change tactics. >Instead of trying to eliminate them all, you've elected to let them go to the areas, then cordon them off. >Any fluffy pony trying to get in can get in, but any trying to leave will be killed. >The cordon is a six mile circle around the city, overlapping with an eighteen mile circle around the theme park. >The distance for the latter was determined as the one to the nearest usable airfield, Geauga County Airport. >Thanks to the civilian exterminators that have joined, you know that loud noises make fluffy ponies run around. >Therefore, your brilliant plan involves bombing the outer edges of the circle first, forcing the ponies in. >Any leaks will be plugged by tanks, infantry, and whatever else happens to be handy. >To further hamper fluffy pony progress in Cleveland, artillery and airstrikes will be used against the bridges. >Surely, Northern Command will approve of this idea. >The microwave tanks don't kill the damn things fast enough. >And there's not enough small arms ammo and grenades on the planet to do the job. >With the fluffy ponies all in one place, artillery and bombing will kill thousands at a time. >Northern Command is a bit perturbed at the idea of destroying infrastructure. >You remind them that millions of fluffy ponies have been shitting in it for days.  It's way past ruined. >Grudgingly, they accept your proposal. >Over thirty years in the Army, and your shot at a fourth star is hinging on killing millions of living kids' toys. >Idly, you look out the window of City Hall. >A few kids have cornered some fluffy ponies, and are systematically killing them with firecrackers up the ass. >You wonder if they're old enough to recruit. ------ >You are an F-15E pilot. >Your unit, the 334th Fighter Squadron, has just been moved from North Carolina to Dayton and attached to the First Air Force. >You are currently on what the Air Force calls a 'fluffy pony interdiction patrol'. >The pilots call it a 'barbecue run'. >Your aircraft is loaded with Mark 79 incendiary bombs. >These are just one thousand pound versions of the Mark 77, which is full of what everyone calls napalm. >Technically, it's not, but the effect is exactly the same. >You will loiter at ten thousand feet for a while until a drone pilot gives you a place to bomb. >Theoretically, you could drop your weapons into a clump of ponies anywhere. >However, the fact that they're awful fire hazards complicates things. >Nobody wants unharmed areas catching on fire, so you have to await instructions. >It's boring work, at least as boring as flying a Strike Eagle can be. >The other plane in your flight heads out to find the KC-10 to refuel, leaving your bird the only one on station. >That's when the call comes up. >A drone has been following a herd that has set up shop in a place called the Rookery, along State Route 322. >They've stopped, for some reason, and they've isolated themselves from other herds. >The area is heavily wooded, and few structures are nearby. >Your superiors want to see the effects of the Mark 79, and this area seems like a prime testing ground. >The smaller bombs are being used near the 'front', the edge of the eighteen mile circle around Spaghetti Land. >If the bigger bombs are safe, they can be used to herd the fluffy ponies into the cordon area, while killing more of them. >You head out to the Rookery. ------ >You are a male fluffy pony named...you've forgotten your name. >You have pretty blue fluff and a red mane and tail. >You even have a horn! >You vaguely remember having a daddy, but that was very long ago. >He stopped loving you, though.  You remember that. >He threw you out of the house in a box and didn't let you back in, no matter how much you cried. >Some fluffy friends came by and told you about the land of spaghetti. >You went with them. >Your new herd never managed to reach that place. >There were so many fluffy friends, you couldn't move. >So your herd turned around and went back. >You've found a places with lots of trees, with really big puddles of water nearby, and a stream. >The smarty friend says this is your new home. >It's much cooler here with the shade of the trees.  Water is easy to find, and so are grassies in the clearings. >The other fluffies attract humans with loud sticks and big monster boxes. >Your smarty friend says you're going to stay here, away from them. >If we don't bother the human things, maybe they won't bother us, he explains. >It seems to work.  A flying thing is overhead, but it doesn't hurt any of you. >The fluffies with babies inside need help eating and drinking. >You help keep them out of the stream. >”Wawa goo' fo' babehs,” they coo, hugging their big bellies. >You hear a far away noise that gets louder as it gets closer. >A big flying thing shoots overhead, leaving as quickly as it came. >The mommies panic and cry at the noise. >You look up and back. >The flying thing had babies!  White things tumble down from the sky. >They crash into the ground a distance away, and suddenly there's fire. >So much fire.  The smarty friend wasn't hurt.  He comes running toward the flames, and you follow him. >”Fwuffies too wawm!  Go in wawa!  Wawa stop wawm!” >You watch fluffy friends waddle painfully into the stream. >The fire clings to them, dripping off their fluff like glowing orange honey. >Some of them completely submerge themselves, yet the flames continue to consume them. >”Why wawa no hewp fwuffies?” the smarty asks. >A mommy fluffy comes by with three burning foals on her back. >”Hewp babehs!  Hewp mumma! He--” >She falls down suddenly, wailing in agony as the fire-honey on her foals plunges through her fluff and skin. >You want to hug her, but something in your mind says no. >The flames spread as if by magic, their orange and yellow wisps flowing through the trees like water. >You see silhouettes of fluffy friends through the light before the fire erases their forms. >They die hugging each other, holes bored through their bodies by the scary fire-honey. >The smarty friend goes into the flames to save his mate. >You are much too scared to follow him and run away, hiding by a tree trunk when you can run no more. >You only open your eyes again when the shiny bright suddenly goes away.  You look up. >A very angry looking cloud is above you. >Fluffies are running past now, screaming for help. >The trees begin to bend and bow.  The invisible force becomes so strong, you can no longer hug onto the tree trunk. >The firestorm, generating its own wind, sucks you back into its core. >You can only get out two words before being engulfed by the flames: “Wan' daaaaaaaddyyyyy!” ------ >You are the commanding general of III Corps. >While you listen in on the operation that is fighting the Rookery fire from the air, you're formulating a resignation letter in your head. >Your idea to test the larger bombs has caused a huge conflagration. >Northern Command is going to have your ass for this. >Oh, they're calling now.  You're fucked. >Maybe not.  While you get reprimanded slightly for the fire, the effects of the firestorm are very intriguing. >Since fluffy ponies are so light, a large enough conflagration could suck in thousands more without the need for further bombs. >Your idea is filed away for later. >Perhaps you'll get that fourth star after all.